HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG

Clinical trials are studying HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG in people with relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer. The main goal is to see whether it can help delay disease progression and to assess safety and other trial outcomes. The current trial is an early phase study in adults with recurrent ovarian cancer.

Table of contents

Trial overview

The available study is titled An Early Phase Clinical Trial to Evaluate COM701 in Relapsed Platinum Sensitive Ovarian Cancer (PSOC), and it is an interventional trial in Phase 1.[1] It is listed as authorised and plans to enroll 60 participants.[1]

This trial is studying HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG in people with relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer, also described as recurrent ovarian cancer.[1]

Who is being studied

The target population is people with relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer.[1] “Relapsed” means the cancer has come back after treatment, and “platinum sensitive” means the cancer had responded before to platinum-based treatment.[1]

The trial summary also uses the term recurrent ovarian cancer, which means ovarian cancer that returns after treatment.[1] The source data does not list detailed eligibility rules such as age limits or lab test requirements.[1]

Trial design and treatment comparison

This is a single-agent study, meaning the trial is looking at HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG by itself rather than as part of a combination regimen.[1] The brief summary says it is being studied as a maintenance regimen in participants with relapsed PSOC.[1]

The intervention list shows two study arms or treatment options: HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG given by intravenous infusion, and saline given by intravenous infusion as the placebo comparison.[1] A placebo is a look-alike treatment used to help compare results fairly.[1]

Main outcome being measured

The primary outcome is progression free survival assessed by the investigator using RECIST 1.1 in participants treated with HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG compared with placebo.[1] Progression free survival means the length of time the cancer does not get worse.[1]

RECIST 1.1 is a standard method doctors use to measure whether a tumor is shrinking, staying the same, or growing.[1] This outcome shows that the study is focused on whether the treatment can help delay cancer growth, not only on whether people can take the treatment safely.[1]

What these results may mean

Because this is an early phase trial, the main goal is to learn more about the treatment in people with relapsed ovarian cancer before larger studies are done.[1] The study design suggests that researchers want to see whether the treatment may help as maintenance therapy after prior treatment has worked for a time.[1]

At this stage, the available trial data do not show final results.[1] The current information mainly tells us who is being studied, how the treatment is being compared, and which outcome matters most in this trial.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT06888921 Phase 1 Relapsed platinum sensitive ovarian cancer; recurrent ovarian cancer Authorised 60

Ongoing Clinical Trials on HUMANISED IGG4 MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST PVRIG

  • Evaluation of COM701 as Maintenance Therapy for Patients with Relapsed Platinum-Sensitive Ovarian Cancer

    Recruiting

    1 1
    France

Glossary

  • Phase 1: An early stage of a clinical trial. It helps researchers learn if a treatment can be studied in people and what effects it may have.
  • Interventional study: A study where participants receive a treatment or control so researchers can compare outcomes.
  • Relapsed: Cancer that has come back after treatment.
  • Platinum sensitive: A type of cancer that responded to platinum-based chemotherapy before, and may respond again after a break.
  • Ovarian cancer: Cancer that starts in the ovaries, which are organs in the female reproductive system.
  • Recurrent ovarian cancer: Ovarian cancer that has returned after treatment.
  • Placebo: A look-alike treatment with no active study drug, used for comparison.
  • Intravenous infusion: A treatment given through a vein, usually by a drip.
  • Progression free survival: The length of time during and after treatment that the cancer does not get worse.
  • RECIST 1.1: A standard way doctors measure whether a cancer is shrinking, staying the same, or growing.

References